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This is a list of Nigerian films released in 2022. 2022. January–March. Opening Title Director Cast Genre Notes Ref. J A N U A R Y: 1 Chief Daddy 2: Going for Broke:
Strangers is a 2022 Nigerian drama film written by Anthony Eloka, produced by Banji Adesanmi and directed by Biodun Stephen. [1] [2] [3] The movie won the Gold Award for Directing at the International Independent Film Awards held in Los Angeles. [4] [5] and it stars Lateef Adedimeji, Bimbo Oshin, Bolaji Ogunmola, Debbie Felix. [2] [5]
The Cake is a Nollywood romantic comedy directed by Prosper Edesiri and produced by Tongryang Pantu. It stars Saskay, Patience Ozokwor, Emmanuel Jibunor, Philip Asaya, Tope Tedela, Sophie Alakija, and Folu Storms, with Dotun Olakunri as the Executive Producer and also Steve Gukas, Co-producer of the film.
The following are the highest-grossing Nigerian films of all time in Nigerian cinemas. The 2024 film Everybody Loves Jenifa currently leads the chart, with ₦1,866,000,000 grossed over a few months. Revenues from special screenings, DVD sales, online streaming, and theatrical screenings outside English-speaking West Africa are excluded from ...
Elesin Oba, The King's Horseman is a 2022 Yoruba-language Nigerian historical drama film directed by Biyi Bandele and distributed by Netflix, based on Wole Soyinka's Death and the King's Horseman, a stage play he wrote while in Cambridge, where he was a fellow student at Churchill College during his political exile from Nigeria, [1] and it is based on a real incident that took place in ...
Chief Daddy 2: Going for Broke is a 2022 Nigeria comedy film that was released as a continuation of Chief Daddy 1.Written by Hiedi Uys, Salah Sabiti, Mo Abudu, produced by EbonyLife and directed by an award-winning director, Niyi Akinmolayan.
This is a list of films / movies produced in Nigeria by year of release. This film-related list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items . ( October 2021 )
It started dominating screens across the African continent, and by extension the Caribbean and the wider diaspora, [21] with the movies significantly influencing cultures [22] and the film actors becoming household names across the continent. The boom also led to backlash against Nigerian films in several countries, bordering on theories such ...